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Mitzvah to Daven: Difference between revisions

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# Some early authorities consider the mitzvah to pray as a biblical mitzvah based on the verse “ולעבדו בכל לבבכם”<ref>Deuteronomy 11:13/דברים פרק יא פסוק יג</ref> which Chazal explain as a reference to the service of the heart<ref>Tanit 2a</ref>, ולעבדו connoting worship through prayer. [[Tefillah]] is listed as the fifth mitzvah in the Rambam's ספר המצות.<Ref>Rambam Tefillah 1:1,ספר המצוות לרמב"ם מצות עשה ה</ref> However, many early authorities argue that the entire obligation is rabbinic and only biblical in times of great distress (בעת צרה). <Ref>Ramban on ספר המצות, Mishna Brurah 106:4 </ref>
# Some early authorities consider the mitzvah to pray as a biblical mitzvah based on the verse “ולעבדו בכל לבבכם”<ref>Deuteronomy 11:13/דברים פרק יא פסוק יג</ref> which Chazal explain as a reference to the service of the heart<ref>Tanit 2a</ref>, ולעבדו connoting worship through prayer. [[Tefillah]] is listed as the fifth mitzvah in the Rambam's ספר המצות.<Ref>Rambam Tefillah 1:1,ספר המצוות לרמב"ם מצות עשה ה</ref> However, many early authorities argue that the entire obligation is rabbinic and only biblical in times of great distress (בעת צרה). <Ref>Ramban on ספר המצות, Mishna Brurah 106:4 </ref>
# One who lengthens his [[prayers]] will merit a longer life. <ref> Sh"t Rivivot Ephraim 1:50:7 says that although the gemara Brachot 54b says this in reference to the amida, it is true for all [[prayers]] </ref>
# One who lengthens his [[prayers]] will merit a longer life. <ref> Sh"t Rivivot Ephraim 1:50:7 says that although the gemara Brachot 54b says this in reference to the amida, it is true for all [[prayers]] </ref>
==Doctors==
# If a doctor is involved with healing a patient and there's an urgent need he shouldn't interrupt to say Shema or Shemona Esrei. However, if he can take a brief break and his involvement isn't critical for that time then he should do so in order to say Shema and Shemona Esrei.<ref>Nishmat Avraham 38:6. Dirshu 93:8 also cites Chut Shani Chol Hamoed v. 1 p. 328 as agreeing.</ref>
# For example, someone who is a doctor healing a Jewish patient and missed the entire period of a Tefillah from beginning to end, since he was dealing with a mitzvah he doesn't need to recite Tashlumin afterwards.<ref>Rav Shlomo Zalman Auerbach cited in Nishmat Avraham 38:6 writes that someone who is healing a Jewish patient is doing a mitzvah and as such he is exempt from Tefillah and if he's involved with that mitzvah from the beginning of the time of the Tefillah to the end then he doesn't even need to recite Tashlumin in accordance with the Derisha YD 341:3. He also cites Rav Zilberstein who explains that even if he doesn't have intention for a mitzvah nonetheless he is practically doing the mitzvah of Hashavat Aveidah and as such the exemption applies.</ref>


==Women==
==Women==